The New Zealand Herald

NZ jumps up global rankings

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Francis Cook

A global survey showed New Zealand i s moving up t he economic competitiv­eness rankings, rising from 24th to 13th during the past decade.

The Global Competitiv­eness Index, from the World Economic Forum, is based on economic data and surveys of large businesses in 137 countries.

It places New Zealand above Canada, Austria and Australia, but below Denmark, Norway and Finland.

The most problemati­c factors for doing business in New Zealand were an i nadequate supply of infrastruc­ture, inefficien­t government bureaucrac­y, insufficie­nt capacity to innovate, and an inadequate­ly educated workforce.

New Zealand ranked third for its lack of corruption and political stability, below Singapore and Finland.

BusinessNZ chief executive Kirk Hope said the rankings “confirmed many of the efficienci­es in the New Zealand economy” and “pointed to areas where more work was needed, including achieving more infrastruc­ture investment and less labour and overall regulation”.

Hope said the results indicated a seeming disparity.

“It shows there is a mismatch between the skills required by business and the skills that are being taught in the education system, and points to the fact that we need to equip more New Zealanders with higher-level technical, trades, science, and maths education,” he said.

The index showed New Zealand ranked highly for financial market developmen­t, lack of corruption, labour market efficiency, health and primary education, higher education and training, and goods market efficiency.

The top 10 countries in the Index were Switzerlan­d, United States, Singapore, Netherland­s, Germany, Hong Kong, Sweden, United Kingdom, Japan, and Finland.

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